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Friend just moved to California and is always talking about these "giant jackrabbits" in his neck of the woods. He looked at the regs and found there is no season and no limit on them. This led us to think two things; one is that there are a ton of jackrabbits or that nobody shoots them because they don't taste well. Being in WA most my life I haven't spent all that time around jackrabbits or know anyone that has shot and eaten one. So for those that have, are they somewhat edible?
Quote from: bigtex on June 07, 2014, 08:57:04 AMFriend just moved to California and is always talking about these "giant jackrabbits" in his neck of the woods. He looked at the regs and found there is no season and no limit on them. This led us to think two things; one is that there are a ton of jackrabbits or that nobody shoots them because they don't taste well. Being in WA most my life I haven't spent all that time around jackrabbits or know anyone that has shot and eaten one. So for those that have, are they somewhat edible?http://apps.leg.wa.gov/wac/default.aspx?cite=232-28-3428. jackrabbit:Closed statewide
:Quote from: Bob33 on June 07, 2014, 11:25:39 AMQuote from: bigtex on June 07, 2014, 08:57:04 AMFriend just moved to California and is always talking about these "giant jackrabbits" in his neck of the woods. He looked at the regs and found there is no season and no limit on them. This led us to think two things; one is that there are a ton of jackrabbits or that nobody shoots them because they don't taste well. Being in WA most my life I haven't spent all that time around jackrabbits or know anyone that has shot and eaten one. So for those that have, are they somewhat edible?http://apps.leg.wa.gov/wac/default.aspx?cite=232-28-3428. jackrabbit:Closed statewideHe's talking about California.....
They're inedible. There's not enough meat on them to make it worth the trouble and what there is cooks up like an old boot sole. Fun to hunt tho!
It's usually a fairly warm climate down there so there's a tendency for worms. I used to live down there in the northern part and we'd eat cottontails but only in the coolers months. Used to be a saying that any month with an 'R' in it was good to go.
Quote from: washelkhunter on June 07, 2014, 09:04:53 AMThey're inedible. There's not enough meat on them to make it worth the trouble and what there is cooks up like an old boot sole. Fun to hunt tho!BSThree times as much meat as a cottontail, tastes just as good, cook in a crockpot for tenderness, and I've never seen a "worm" in one. Some guys I knew went to So OR and shot about a hundred of them, left them to rot... friends no longer.Windwalker, the only tough thing about porkies is skinning them, taste just like a cross between rabbit and turkey.
Quote from: lokidog on June 15, 2014, 11:45:15 PMQuote from: washelkhunter on June 07, 2014, 09:04:53 AMThey're inedible. There's not enough meat on them to make it worth the trouble and what there is cooks up like an old boot sole. Fun to hunt tho!BSThree times as much meat as a cottontail, tastes just as good, cook in a crockpot for tenderness, and I've never seen a "worm" in one. Some guys I knew went to So OR and shot about a hundred of them, left them to rot... friends no longer.Windwalker, the only tough thing about porkies is skinning them, taste just like a cross between rabbit and turkey.Do you soak them in milk?